Don Lee had a neat surprise on display at Monterey. He had received original blueprints of the Sunoco fueling tower as used at the '69 Wolverine Trans-Am and decided to recreate it based on those prints. Not only is it recreated in appearance, it is fully functional!I was told he ran a few demonstrations using colored water and pumping it into the original '68 Daytona fuel tank from his car.Unfortunately, I missed each demonstration.

SCCA, of course, should have jumped on this the first time they saw this apparatus, and kicked it out then and there - a perfect example of the "Unfair Advantage". I can't imagine the time and expense involved.

Kind thanks Jon for the link documenting the assembly of the replica fuel rig,

Again, I really appreciate the consistent and informed support. With regards to the scale model work that I do and attempt, it can be hard for many to grasp that I'm not building a kit, that I'm not final finishing a wholly engineered piece that requires the concerted effort of a single weekend to see to completion. Indeed, to chart even modest progress and have it registered as progress does much to keep me going. That enthusiasts visiting and contributing to the forum are reliably capable of making this distinction matters a great deal to me, hence I feel quite comfortable within the space of this virtual destination.

Concerning the posts I clamor to read across the CRG/Trans Am messageboard function, I greatly admire the dedication you've shown. You literally see to the care and feeding of every thread here, and how disciplined and neatly matters have unfolded across topics for your noteworthy effort. The vitality, the enthusiasm and commitment on display with regards to your posts prompts me to dig deeper time and again with regards to my scale work. With thanks and evidencing considerable respect...

Mike, I appreciate the kind words. I think everyone who signs up and posts here has got the same kind of passion for this as I do. There are a significant number of car enthusiast forums where there is bickering, sniping, foul language, etc. I'm very pleased that this forum has not gone in that direction and in fact I won't let it. I appreciate everyone's contributions and I hope they appreciate mine. I don't pretend to know it all and always enjoy finding out or seeing something new. Many thanks to you for taking the time to detail your modeling efforts. They are very well researched and executed and, as such, are truly appreciated.

IMHO If it is not specifically excluded or specifically predetermined then it's fair game. Racing used to be much more about innovation and car/team prep where as now seems like the sanctioning bodies want to dictate what, when, where, why, and how leaving the results to the drivers alone... I liked the engineering side as much or more than the driving side. Oh how I yearn for the "outlaw" days...

Very interesting about the fueling rig. I also am very curious about the '69 Penske Camaros fuel fill reservoir/opening. I honestly have just never seen any good pics of it up close but have seen the earlier ones (i.e. '67, '68). I hate to ask for more pics but I have looked through many pics on here and although I've definitely found glimpses of them, I've never seen a good pic of the whole thing. I'll be completely honest, I do want to see this because I'm trying to recreate it on a project but I'm also just very curious to know how they work so if anyone has any pics/video of it, thank you in advance. I wanna thank you guys because I am learning so much about something I've been very passionate about for years and just didn't have enough money and/or information. I don't take it for granted and I'm VERY greatful!

This is the best I can do right now. Maybe next week I can find something else for you. This is the gas filler on Don Lee's '68 Penske car. The '69 Penske cars early that season used this style of filler lid (and filler neck, for that matter) although it was positioned a little more rearward than shown here and the part that is painted black on Don's lid was stainless (silver) on the '69 car. I hope that helps.

That Jon that helps alot and just confirms that the one I saw on that GMP scale model site for the '69 is fairly accurate. Still curious how it works though. Is it just hinged from the back and how does it stay shut? Sorry if I'm off topic here just wondering because just like you I want to learn everything I possibly can about classic Trans Am.